The study shows the impact of providing new treatment services to rural areas with limited healthcare infrastructures and transportation hurdles. | Health
Dr. Esther Tailfeathers, who recently resigned her position with AHS' Indigenous Wellness Core, said it's up to both Ottawa and Alberta to respond to the drug crisis.
yeah, i mean, i admitted it. they learned about a fake forge account, you made the fake forge account. yes, i did. and did you tell them about your opioid struggles, opioid addictions? i told them about my addiction, yes, sir. to your knowledge, were any of your law partners aware of your addiction? not just to my knowledge, i m certain that they were not aware of my addiction. how would you characterize your opioid use or addiction, severe, moderate? then or now? no, in 2020, 2021? i mean, i don t know how i would have characterized it then. after going to rehab and learning just more of the things i ve learned really talking to
0 talked about that he found later in my office. and it was tight it was handwritten, ready to be tightened up by, you know because of the charges against paw, i kept everything close in the civil case, it was danny in his office that was doing it, and i had that document prepared, handwritten in the neatest handwriting that i could make because a secretary other than mine, a paralegal other than mine was going to be the person who was going to put that financial information into the final document, and that s the document that mark ball talked about that he found on my desk whenever it was that he found it. so that was what was going to be if necessary, what was going to be used thursday. alec, the jury has heard about testimony of you stealing client funds. did you do that? i did, yes. did you steal or divert that farris fee away from the law firm? i did. how did you get in such a financial predicament that led you to steal money that wasn t yours? you know, i m not